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Filippo Brunelleschi was born in Florence in 1377, and died here in 1446. Of
him Vasari wrote: "He was given to us by Heaven to give new form to
architecture". Inside the Cathedral is a portrait medallion, beneath which his tomb
was located. Outside the Cathedral is the sculpture by Pampaloni, portraying him next to
Arnolfo di Cambio. Brunelleschi is famous for having built the dome of Florence Cathedral,
and for the innovative techniques by which he adapted classical forms to the spirit of his
own times.
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The dome of Florence Cathedral
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The wooden Crucifix
in Santa Maria Novella
[zoom]
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In 1401 he took part in the famous public competition (won by Ghiberti) for
the commission to make the Baptistery doors; his gilded bronze panel of the Sacrifice of Isaac may be seen in the Bargello. In the church of Santa Maria Novella we can
see his wooden Crucifix (1418-20) in the Gondi Chapel. |
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| He studied the science of perspective and there are panels showing the
Baptistery and Piazza Signoria. In 1417 he began work on the dome, kept him fully occupied
for twenty years. This dome became the focus of great hope for the future and a symbol for
all Florentines; Leon Battista Alberti wrote that it seemed to cover with its shadow all
the people of Tuscany. In the Opera del Duomo Museum there are wooden models and building
materials associated with the dome's construction. In 1419 Brunelleschi was commissioned
by the Silk Guild to design the Foundling Hospital of the Innocenti, which with the
harmonious perspective geometry of its loggia is the first masterpiece of renaissance
architecture. The Piazza Santissima Annunziata, which it flanks, later became one of the
most admired urban spaces in Europe. From
here we proceed to the church of San Lorenzo (begun in 1419), whose luminous interior and
nobility of form recall the basilicas of antiquity. In the centrally-planned Old Sacristy
there is an evident spatial dialogue between the sphere and the cube, and an architectural
language derived from the classical world. |

The church of San Lorenzo (inside)
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| On our way to Santa Croce we pass the Palagio del Parte Guelfa, which
Brunelleschi improved: he designed the council hall on the first floor, and the delicately
moulded classical window frames outside. Next to Santa Croce we come to the Pazzi Chapel,
begun in 1430, a centrally-planned space with a hemi-spherical dome over barrel vaulting,
its white plaster walls contrasting with the grey stone of the pilasters and entablature. Brunelleschi's last great project was the church of Santo Spirito (begun
1436), preceded by the Rotonda of Santa Maria degli Angeli (c. 1434), not far from the
Foundling Hospital, which was never finished but clearly shows the influence of classical
centrally-planned buildings.
Brunelleschi had intended that the façade of Santo Spirito should
face the Arno, but this scheme was altered; so too was his plan to express the curved
shape of the side chapels by an undulating exterior, and his idea of having four doors
instead of the traditional three; these changes were made by the architects who completed
the church after Brunelleschi's death. The design of Palazzo Pitti is also attributed to
Brunelleschi, though it was considerably modified in later times by the Medici Grand
Dukes. |

The church of Santo Spirito (inside)

The Pazzi Chapel (inside)
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| Brunelleschi's
works in Florence: |
The
dome of Santa Maria del Fiore Cathedral, piazza del Duomo.
Bargello
Museum, via del Proconsolo, 4.
Church of Santa
Maria Novella, Gondi Chapel, piazza Santa Maria Novella.
Hospital
of the Innocenti (Foundling Hospital), piazza Santissima Annunziata.
Church of San
Lorenzo and the Old Sacristy, piazza San Lorenzo.
Palazzo di Parte
Guelfa, via di Carpaccio.
Pazzi Chapel,
Museo dell'Opera di Santa Croce, ,piazza Santa Crocee, 16.
Rotonda of Santa
Maria degli Angeli, piazza Brunelleschi.
Church of Santo
Spirito, piazza Santo Spirito.
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